Competitive Intelligence

Tactical, Operational & Strategic Analysis of Markets, Competitors & Industries

August Jackson

Starwood Sues Hilton Hotels for Alleged Industrial Espionage

All,

I read this article in today's Washington Post: Instead of Zen Dens, Starwood Builds an Espionage Case Against Hilton. Starwood's lawsuit alleges a systematic process of Starwood employees being recruited to join Hilton taking large volumes of strategically-important documents with them.

Putting aside the question of law for a moment, if what is alleged is true it's clear that this is an instance of questionable ethics. Hilton alleges that the documents they returned to Starwood are "not all that sensitive." Does the sensitivity of the information matter as a question of ethics?

Here are some excerpts that summarize the details of the alleged industrial espionage:

Earlier this year, Hilton Hotels shipped eight boxes to Starwood Hotels and Resorts. Companies don't typically send much mail to their competitors, and Starwood's general counsel discovered something odd in the boxes: thousands of Starwood documents and electronic files.

Lawyers from Hilton, which is moving to Tysons Corner from Beverly Hills this summer, included a letter saying they found the material in the homes and offices of star employees the firm had recruited from Starwood. The material, according to the letter, had been reviewed and didn't seem all that sensitive. Hilton was returning it "in an abundance of caution."

Starwood's attorneys did not agree. They hit Hilton with a 91-page lawsuit alleging "the clearest imaginable case of corporate espionage," saying that "the sheer volume of theft is extraordinary, and may be unprecedented." The files included Starwood's strategic development plans and materials for a boutique hotel using the words "zen den." Hilton allegedly drew from the material, apparently using a little wordplay, in developing a hip new boutique hotel called Denizen.

The lawsuit, filed in April, alleges that when [Hilton CEO Chris] Nassetta began the recruiting process, [then-Starwood employee Ross] Klein requested "large volumes of confidential information from Starwood employees, which he took home, had loaded on a personal laptop computer and/or forwarded to a personal e-mail account, and which he then took to and used at and for Hilton." The lawsuit also contends that Klein signed an employment agreement -- which he faxed to Hilton from Starwood's office -- but waited three days to tell his boss he was leaving, all the while requesting more documents.

"This brand-in-a-box information provides Hilton with the means to bring a competitive hotel chain to market expeditiously and without expending tens of millions of dollars and many years on development, thereby avoiding the inevitable and costly trial and error along the way," the lawsuit contends. "Instead, Hilton has been able to exploit the time and tens of millions of dollars that was invested by Starwood to create these materials."


What are the ethical behaviors related to employees coming from competition and contributing to the competitive intelligence of their new employer? Is brining over documentation completely out of the question? Is there a different standard for sales materials (such as brochures and pamphlets) versus work papers with or without confidentiality markings? How about debriefings of the new hires?

Tags: espionage, ethics, hospitality, industrial, recruiting

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Without knowing all of the specifics of the (somewhat weird) lawsuit cited above, I hesitate to comment on it. It certainly serves as an interesting illustration... No matter how broad or convoluted the legal definition of work product, a company must operate within that definition. Accepting as "intelligence" that which is as good as contraband should be clearly proscribed by company policies. But that is only the legal side of things, and one deals with a slippery issue indeed when the Ethics thereof are determined by Law, rather than the other way around. But that is the way it is, so I would say that transferring some of the responsibility is recommendable. Why not encourage the implementation of a Work Product Legal Questionaire for each new hire? "Can you define work product?", etc.

As for pure Ethics, well, this may sting a little. The Ethics of the marketplace are the Ethics of play and games. So the answer is simple. One must play by the rules, and what's more, one must assume that others, including one's competition, will do the same. The willful skirting of rules is common in any game, but too much of this, especially in big business, begins to take the form of soft gangsterism. What's fair play and what isn't must be determined by clear rules, not by simply knowing what one can get away with... Which means that sometimes the love of the game itself has to be greater than the love of winning.

Reply to This

Joseph, we never know ALL specifics of any lawsuit but we must always assess and decide. The question is therefore "Do we know ENOUGH specifics?"

By the way, your conclusion "Which means that sometimes the love of the game itself has to be greater than the love of winning" concerns all of us. Don't insist that the following JPG pasted to the web page Did Corporate Spying Doom Denizen Hotels? ( http://www.luxist.com/2009/04/23/did-corporate-spying-doom-denizen-... ) is indifferent to you. ;-)


Best,
Tad

Reply to This

LOL, good one Mr Lemanczyk. Ha...ha...ha...

You have a way to put things across.

Hindsight:

The way to become rich is to put all your eggs in one basket and then watch the basket - Andrew Carnegie.

Reply to This

RSS

Latest Activity

5 hours ago
I find websites like www.wikiinvest.com as good starting points for CI projects. But again these are more websites than tools. I have not come across any comprehensive tools than can do the analysis for you and most CI tools I have seen here and els…
5 hours ago
Xavier Le Nué is now a member of Competitive Intelligence
12 hours ago
I've compiled a list of on-line CI resources here: http://augustjackson.net/competitive-intelligence-resources/ P.S. Elen thanks for the shout-out for the CI Podcast.
13 hours ago
Hi Richard, Seena's book is a great way to start your CI library. Here is the link to a prior Ning discussion on this topic which I think you'll find helpful. http://competitiveintelligence.ning.com/forum/topics/the-essential-ci-library. I also use…
13 hours ago
Richard added a discussion
I am reading Seena Sharp's Competitive Intelligence Advantage and it is quickly becoming a favorite. I have read other books and found them too academic to be practical. I am compiling a list of recommended reading (books, websites, blogs, magazines…
14 hours ago
Richard added a blog post
I am reading Seena Sharp's Competitive Intelligence Advantageand it is quickly becoming one of my favorites. I have read other books, but got little practical use out of them--they were much to academic. I am trying to compile a recommended bibliogr…
14 hours ago
I am enjoying the book, still working through it with all my other reading, but I like the practicality of it. Practitioners of the art need more than academic treaties on the subject. And thanks for making it a Kindle selection--when you travel aro…
14 hours ago
18 hours ago
Anamika and Rishabha Singh are now friends
19 hours ago
23 hours ago
Well getting a clean feed takes a combination of good web-sources and appropriate taxonomy-based semantic filters. It seems your friend's RSS is clean and thus it may be worth to look at his/her taxonomy. Any insight?
yesterday
Indeed Richard you seem pretty well covered as far as information retrieval is concerned. What about analysis, sharing, collaboration with others? What about aggregating those feeds together? Any insights would be helpful.
yesterday
I use e-sobi. It is a rss and podcast feed reader. I can add the feeds I want, I can store pages for later use, I can set alerts. Seems to be more powerful than the free readers. SInce you can organize it the way you want, it provides a way to quick…
yesterday
Michael Sandman is now friends with EL GOUGI HAYAT and Chat Lok
yesterday
yesterday
Vijayendra Acharya and Eric Garland are now friends
yesterday
Vijayendra Acharya is now a member of Competitive Intelligence
yesterday
yesterday
A collective of professionals and passionate amateurs around the globe who analyze a world in transition and help guide leaders in their most critical decisions.
yesterday

Visitor Statistics

© 2010   Created by Arik Johnson

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!